Absolute shockingly,
antarctic summer ice melt is now occurring 10 times faster than it did
600 years ago, with ice loss speeding up the most since mid 20th
Century, new research has warned.
To more more,
the 1000-year Antarctic Peninsula climate reconstruction published in
the journal Nature Geoscience, shows that summer ice melting has
intensified almost 10-fold, and mostly since the mid 20th Century. As a result, summer ice melt affects the stability of Antarctic ice shelves and glaciers.
In 2008, a
U.K.-French science team drilled a 364-metre long ice core from James
Ross Island, near the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, to
measure past temperatures in the area.
Moreover, they discovered that this ice core could also give an unique and unexpected insight into ice melt in the region.
Visible
layers in the ice core indicated periods when summer snow on the ice cap
has become aloof and then refroze. By measuring the thickness of these
melt layers the scientists were
able to examine how the history of melting compared with changes in
temperature at the ice core site over the last 1,000 years.
According
to lead author Dr Nerilie Abram of The Australian National University
and British Antarctic Survey (BAS) they have found that the coolest
conditions on the Antarctic Peninsula and the lowest amount of summer melt occurred around 600 years ago.
In fact,
Mr. Abram said that at that time temperatures were around 1.6 degrees
Celsius lower than those recorded in the late 20th Century and the
amount of annual snowfall that melted
and refroze was about 0.5 per cent. Today, they see almost ten times as
much (5 per cent) of the annual snowfall melting each year.
Abram
said in a statement that summer melting at the ice core site today is
now at a level that is higher than at any other time over the last 1000
years and fact-fully, temperatures
at this site increased gradually in phases over many hundreds of years,
most of the severity of melting has happened since the mid-20th century
which is the first time it has
been demonstrated that levels of ice melt on the Antarctic Peninsula
have been particularly sensitive to increasing temperature during the
20th century.
Abram
continued what that means is that the Antarctic Peninsula has warmed to a
level where even small increases in temperature can now lead to a big
increase in summer ice melt.
Dr Robert
Mulvaney, co-author of the paper said that having a record of previous
melt intensity for the Peninsula is particularly important because of
the glacier retreat and ice shelf
loss they are now seeing in the area while he continued saying that
summer ice melt is a key process that is thought to have weakened ice
shelves along the Antarctic Peninsula
leading to a succession of dramatic collapses, as well as speeding up
glacier ice loss across the region over the last 50 years.
It's really a high time that we realise the possible impact of the natures disastrous phenomenon.
Let us stop global warming, Let us save our home!
(AW:Samrat Biswas)
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